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. 2017 Jan 12;11(1):e0005276. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005276

Table 1. O. montana transmission data summary.

Days P.I.a No. fleas fed % Infected CFU/fleab No. fleas blocked No. fleas partially blocked CFU transmittedc
Experiment 1 (1.9 x 108 CFU/ml)d
0 - 100 3.7 x 104 ±2.9 x 104 - - -
3 173 65 3.1 x 105 ±5.3 x 105 0 2 0
10 177 67 2.8 x 105 ±2.9 x 105 23 16 210,000
17 176 50 4.6 x 105 ±4.1 x 105 8 3 54,000
24 100 47 4.5 x 105 ±3.3 x 105 3 1 1,900
31 44 21 2.8 x 105 ±1.1 x 105 0 0 0
Experiment 2 (4.0 x 108 CFU/ml)d
0 - 100 2.4 x 105 ±2.1 x 105 - - -
3 136 35 2.1 x 105 ±2.2x 105 0 4 0
10 175 60 2.4 x 105 ±4.9 x 105 9 24 110,250
17 144 80 3.3 x 105 ±5.9 x 105 12 3 130,000
24 156 50 2.3 x 105 ±2.9 x 105 18 10 42,625
31 160 70 4.4 x 105 ±3.0 x 105 6 7 27,900
Experiment 3 (1.4 x 109 CFU/ml)d
0 - 100 2.9 x 105 ±2.0 x 105 - - -
3 202 40 1.8 x 105 ±2.3 x 105 0 3 7
10 188 65 6.0 x 105 ±7.1 x 105 20 20 418,900
17 195 90 5.0 x 105 ±4.1 x 105 14 17 392,700
24 136 80 4.6 x 105 ±4.7 x 105 3 9 76,800
31 177 80 5.3 x 105 ±2.7 x 105 7 5 403,600

aDays after the infectious blood meal. Day 0 indicates the day of infection; data for this day are included to show the initial infectious dose (no transmission test was done).

bMean ± SD in infected fleas.

cData used for Fig 4A.

dConc. of Y. pestis in infectious blood meal on day 0.